Experts are warning local governments in east China's
Jiangsu Province about the increasing influx of migrants to its
urban areas, making Jiangsu the most densely populated in the
country.
According to a survey recently released by the Jiangsu
Provincial Bureau of Statistics (JPBS), the population density in
the province has reached 729 people per square kilometer, 5.3 times
the nation's average.
According to He Guangyuan from the JPBS, migration from other
regions to the urban areas of Jiangsu is the major reason for the
population increase.
Compared with rural places, urban areas in Jiangsu experienced
an expanding population, as most migrants from other provinces or
the countryside of Jiangsu chose to settle down in the province's
cities, China Daily, the country's main English-language newspaper,
reported on Tuesday.
Cities in South Jiangsu, witnessing dramatic economic growth,
have attracted a huge number of migrants and have seen their
population increase by 9.74 percent in the 2000-2005 period, He was
quoted as saying.
To solve the problem of overcrowding, many densely-populated
cities in Jiangsu have taken various measures.
For instance, Nanjing, the capital city of Jiangsu, has
announced recently that it will speed up the construction of
suburban districts to relocate factories, institutions and
residents.
The latest population census conducted by the local statistics
bureau revealed that the number of residents per square kilometer
has reached 282,000 in Nanjing, which makes it one of the most
densely populated old cities in the country, the report cited Liu
Qinghao, vice-director of the Nanjing Municipal Urban Planning
Bureau, as saying.
To date, more than 390 medium- and large enterprises have
already been moved to suburban industrial parks.
Moreover, dozens of universities and middle schools have set up
campuses in the suburb.
More than 300,000 residents are going to be relocated in the
newly built suburban residential districts within five years, the
report said.
Like Nanjing, five other cities in the province, which boast a
population larger than five million, have taken measures to
relocate their work units and residents in suburban areas.
(Xinhua News Agency May 9, 2006)
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